Wednesday, January 7, 2009
You are not logged in: Login | Register

How to Paper Train a Senior Dog

By MacDonald
 
Related Entries:

Instructions

Things You’ll Need:

  • Newspapers
  • Potty or wee wee pads
  • Clicker
  • Treats
  • Step 1:
    Take your dog to the vet if you think she is not holding it as well as before, or if she is suddenly having accidents in the house. It could be as simple as an easily treated urinary tract infection (UTI) or incontinence caused by spaying, called spay incontinence. Or perhaps she has developed intolerance to her usual food that makes her potty in the house.
  • Step 2:
    Put newspapers or absorbent potty pads in the area she usually goes. Dogs tend to always potty in the same place. Some dogs need a bit of privacy or will feel uncomfortable going potty in your presence, especially if they are used to doing it outside.
  • Step 3:
    Clicker train her to let her know it is OK and that the proper place to do is on the paper. Even senior dogs can learn very quickly with clicker training. Clickers are available at any pet store. You will also need some small, soft, low-fat treats for her.
  • Step 4:
    Prime the clicker first. This means that your dog understands that when she hears the click, she gets rewarded and praised right afterwards. Have a small handful of treats in one hand and the clicker in the other. Click once and immediately treat. By the time you have done this about ten times in a row, you will notice your dog looking not at your treat hand but at the clicker hand. She understands now that the click makes treats happen.
  • Step 5:
    Immediately after your dog potties on the paper, click and treat her. Don't disturb her in the middle of her business, but give her praise directly afterwards. Of course you can do this without a clicker too. Just give her lots of praise and rewards for going on the paper.
  • Step 6:
    Do nothing if she misses the paper and potties next to it. Scolding her for pottying will only confuse her at this point. Simply don't praise or reward if she misses. Clean up the soiled paper every time. It is more sanitary and your dog may be fussy about pottying on papers that are already messed.
  • Step 7:
    Make sure she has a large area of paper to go on at first. As she gets more accurate, you can make the paper potty area smaller and smaller until you only need a small enough area that she will hit and you will be able to clean up easily.

Tips & Warnings

  • If you use treats make sure they are small and low fat. If you use a lot of them, compensate by making her next meal just a little smaller. It is unhealthy for dogs to be overweight, especially senior dogs.
  • Feeding a high quality food or raw diet will make her stool volume smaller and less smelly. Cheap food produces larger and smellier poop.
  • An advantage to your senior dog pottying on paper is you can easily see if her urine is very dark or tinged with blood. This often indicates a UTI, so take her to the vet.
How to Paper Train a Senior Dog Provided by eHow.com

More Puppy Pages

How to Potty Train a Dog to Go on an Indoor Pad

How to Potty Train a Dog to Go on an Indoor Pad

If you have a dog and live in a big city, especially if that dog is small, you know that it is not always feasible or desirable to walk the dog every time it has to go to the bathroom. One great solution to this problem are doggy-pads (also called wee...

Read More

How to Use Clicker Training for Dogs

How to Use Clicker Training for Dogs

Clicker training is do-it-yourself method that will strengthen the bond you have with your dog. Your pet will quickly learn how to act if you just follow these steps.

Read More

How to Understand Clicker Training

How to Understand Clicker Training

Using a clicker is one of the most effective ways to train a dog, because it communicates to the dog what you want him to do. Training is all about timing--and there is no better training tool to improve your timing. Clickers can speed up the training...

Read More

How to Train Small Dogs to Use a Litter Box

How to Train Small Dogs to Use a Litter Box

Little dogs can mean big fun. Many people find that smaller dogs require less maintenance, cost less in terms of food, and are easier to tote around than larger breeds. But beyond all of the benefits, these pint-sized pals come with one hefty drawback...

Read More

How to teach your dog to sit with a clicker

How to teach your dog to sit with a clicker

Clicker training is fun, easy and relatively cheap. You can buy a clicker at many pet stores for under $5 and use it for all positive reinforcement training. You can teach your dog to sit with a clicker with a few catchy steps.

Read More

Puppy Up Your Blog

Daily Puppy WidgetBox Widget Get this widget from Widgetbox